[MSN] Shibuya's 'loyal dog Hachiko' vanishes. METAL THIEVES SUSPECTED.

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Sun Apr 1 10:12:24 CEST 2007


Sunday, April 1, 2007


METAL THIEVES SUSPECTED
Shibuya's 'loyal dog Hachiko' vanishes


By KYRSTEN REILLY
Staff writer
A team of audacious thieves, apparently disguised as a cleaning crew, made
off with one of Tokyo's most famous landmarks in the early hours of
Saturday. 

 
Fans of Hachiko on Saturday pose at the pedestal where the statue of
Shibuya's famous dog stood until its disappearance in the wee hours of the
morning. JAPAN TIMES PHOTO:
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20070401x1.html

The statue of "loyal dog Hachiko," a popular rendezvous spot on the north
side of JR Shibuya Station since 1934, was reported missing shortly after
dawn, when a newspaper delivery truck driver spotted the bare pedestal and
notified policemen at the nearby "koban." 

While police have yet to issue an official statement concerning the statue's
disappearance, The Japan Times has learned the entire scene was recorded by
NHK's 24-hour monitor camera affixed to the Shibuya Station building.

A network technician described what clearly appears to be a well planned
caper. "Five men in khaki work duds, wearing hats, safety glasses and gauze
masks, moved in about 1:43 a.m., after the trains had stopped running," said
the man, who declined to give his name. 

"They set up traffic cones and 'Men Working' signs, and then raised several
blue vinyl work sheets around the statue. It took them about 10 minutes to
get it off the pedestal. 

"They put it on a hand truck and threw a drop cloth over it. On the video
you can see them wheeling it toward the street before they disappear from
view." 

While motives for the theft are uncertain, speculation has focused on the
soaring prices for copper and other metals, spurred by the construction boom
in China leading up to the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

The National Police Agency reported 5,701 metal thefts in 2006, with losses
valued at 2 billion yen. The 198 thefts reported in Tokyo during January and
February 2007 represented a fourfold jump from the same period last year. 

"I'm not surprised -- nothing is sacred for these thieves," said a source in
the Tokyo Metropolitan Police. 

"They made off with 200 incense burners at a cemetery in Kanagawa and a
bronze bell from a fire watchtower in Ibaraki. They'll clearly stop at
nothing. I fear Hachiko might be on his way to China," he added. 

As news of the theft spread, a large crowd gathered, with several teenage
girls appearing close to tears. "Can't somebody do something? This is really
vexing," sobbed Saitama teenager Satoko Kawasaki, who held up the image of
Hachiko she had recently shot using her cell phone camera. 

"Without Hachiko, Shibuya Station won't be the same any more. I might as
well tell my boyfriends to meet me by the statue at Ebisu." 

Shibuya's illustrious icon, a purebred Akita dog born in November 1923, was
owned by Hidesaburo Ueno, a professor of agriculture who taught at the
University of Tokyo Komaba Campus. 

After Ueno passed away in May 1925 the dog continued to wait for him outside
the station. To commemorate the animal's loyalty, sculptor Sho Ando was
commissioned to produce a bronze statue, which was unveiled in April 1934
with Hachiko in attendance. 

The dog expired a year later of filaria, a parasitic disease, at age 11. Its
body, preserved by a taxidermist, can be viewed on the second floor of the
National Museum of Science in Ueno. Ironically, Ando's original statue was
also melted down for its metal during the Pacific War. 

After the war a replacement was recast by Takeshi Ando, the original
sculptor's son, and dedicated in August 1948. 

When the plaza was extended in 1989 the statue was moved and turned facing
eastward, the original direction. 

Theft of the icon has spurred an international outcry. Shibuya Ward's Sister
City, the Sixth Arrondissement of Paris, France, expressed its "profound
sympathy" and promptly offered to cast a new replacement for "le toutou
fidele," provided Shibuya agrees to accept a poodle. 

Meanwhile, city authorities in Odate, Akita Prefecture -- Hachiko's
birthplace -- have requested police to boost security measures for an
identical statue located in front of the main station. 

The Japan Times 
(C) All rights reserved



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